Location:
Port Angeles, WA
Driving Status:
Experienced Driver
Social Link:
akkamaan On The Web
Pure breed Swede Highschool 1971 Construction engineer degree 1971-73 Swedish Army fleet manager 1973-74 Road construction surveyor 1974-75 Teaching basic logging machine technology 1975-79 Forest engineer 1979-81 Logging manager 1981-84 Teaching credentials 1984 Teaching forestry and short log harvesting 1984-2000 US resident 2000 Truck driver at Gordon Trucking Inc 2001 Truck driver at Atlas Trucking Inc 2004 Retired 2014 US citizen 2014
Posted: 8 years, 6 months ago
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Hi all, I am new to this forum and TruckingTruth
I still try to figure out the tagging system for topic areas. Seems like you have to post in general discussions and the mention the topic tag words listed in "All Topics By Tag". Seems pretty clear and simple now
Is there a way to add more topic tags?
Posted: 8 years, 6 months ago
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Hi all, I am new to this forum and TruckingTruth
Hi all! I am new to this forum. I retired from trucking about two years ago, after a 13-year trucking career. After going through Western Pacific Truck School (Thank you Michael Darling) I was offered a position and started 2001 for Gordon Trucking when I lived in Sacramento CA. I was very happy with Gordon, and they, over time, let me develop into the type of driver I wanted to be. A local driver that sleep at home most nights. In 2004 my wife wanted to move back to Port Angeles WA where she had most of her family. At the time, Gordon could not provide a local job for me out of Port Angeles, and I was sad to leave them. Instead, I got hired by a local smaller company that was the main carrier for the local Nippon Papermill. I worked for Atlas trucking for almost 10 years, hauling heavy haul on 8 axle rigs, hauling wood chips, containers to the ports, big paper rolls, ONP, and other supplies to the mill. Coming from Gordon with "1700" trucks in their fleet compared to Atlas with some "20-ish" trucks, was like two different worlds. Both in a good way and in a not so good way. At Gordon, everything was dialed down to a science. I remember especially the to the first introduction class after I was "hired". A lady walked around before the class and laid down a brand new tire pressure gauge in front of each "student driver". Nothing more was said about that tire gauge. It was a gift. I was just a natural thing for Gordon that every driver ever should have a chance to excuse lacking of tire checks because they didn't have a tire gauge. It took me a few years at Atlas Trucking before I fully understood the importance of that tire gauge. After a year or two, I had learned at Atlas that not every driver, or to say no other driver, ever used their own tire gauge. That caused a lot of frustration when I picked up a loaded trail at 1.30 am in the morning and had after 250 miles of driving a 7 am non-negotiable delivery appointment in Portland OR the same day. Most other drivers didn't even "kick" the trailers they dropped for preloading the afternoon before. Even less they post-tripped the air brakes, and if they did pre-trip or post-trip the brake system, they only assumed they knew how to do it. Even shop guys at Atlas failed to figure out an air leak in the service line on the trailer because they didn't know how to do it. They just thought they knew. It all followed the same pattern with weight management, drop axles etc. Atlas really cared about drivers being perfect, but the problem was that ownership did not have any personal driving experience, so they did not know how to address technical issues. Atlas did not have a training coordinator for That's why I am here, to be able to share some of my experiences I learned from 13 years of OTR and local trucking, many of them rarely mentioned in training classes, "manuals" or even forums.
I have been browsing through Bretts CDL training program and it looks really good. Everything a new driver need to know, they can read and learn there. What differs a rookie driver from an experienced driver is....just the additional stuff and tricks we learned from experience. All the small details and tricks that make your day shorter and more productive. I think I have a few things to mention, and I am also still eager to learn stuff that I never thought about before.
Posted: 8 years, 6 months ago
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Hi all, I am new to this forum and TruckingTruth
Thank you G-town! I do not have anything that will turn trucking industry upside down or inside out. But small little details that can prevent or solve a problem or two...
Per A.